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SWIRcamera price
One thing was a heat sensitive (I think) transparency medium that would copy a b&w negative to a nice positive sepia-toned transparency, suitable for slide projection. Magic! I still have a few, I think.
Edmunds is a wonderful company that started out serving amateur astronomers with products of their own manufacture , military surplus ( a big deal back in the day) as well as other interesting stuff. I built my first telescopes with their parts and products. Along the way they created Edmund Optics and began manufacturing all kinds of highly sophisticated optical products. They have always had an educational bent , but this new service looks great Thanks
Richmond, BC, Canada - January 25, 2023 - LUCID Vision Labs, Inc., a designer and manufacturer of unique and innovative industrial vision cameras, today announced the availability of the new compact and cost-efficient Triton SWIR IP67-rated 1.3 MP and 0.3 MP cameras. More Headlines Geo Week Announces Keynote - Francis Scott Key Bridge: Rescue, Recovery, and Rebuild Fluence Returns to MJBizCon, Releases Ninth Annual Cannabis Business Times "State of the Cannabis Lighting Market" Report Bunge Reaches 100% Monitoring of its Indirect Soy Value Chain in Brazil's Priority Regions Verdi Launches Accessible Soil Moisture Monitoring Kit for Farmers Merschman Seeds Selects Meristem Crop PerformanceArticles What is GNSS RTK positioning? A Data-First Strategy for Big Ag Digital Transformation Going back to our roots: sustainable farming with natural minerals Carbon Robotics Secures $70 Million in Funding, Led by BOND Maximizing Commercial Greenhouse Profits Through High-Value Crop SelectionThe Triton SWIR is a GigE PoE camera featuring wide-band and high-sensitivity Sony SenSWIR 1.3 MP IMX990 and 0.3 MP IMX991 InGaAs sensors, capable of capturing images across both visible and invisible light spectrums, and boasting a miniaturized pixel size of 5μm. The camera's capability of imaging on the short-wavelength infrared light spectrum opens a world of industrial applications with greater precision in fruit inspection and sorting, packaging, IR microscopy, semiconductor inspection, material sorting and more. Triton's Factory Tough™ design offers IP67 protection, Power over Ethernet (PoE) and provides protection against shock, vibration, water, dust, and electromagnetic interferences. It features Active Sensor Alignment for superior optical performance, a compact 29 mm x 44 mm size, M12 Ethernet and M8 general purpose I/O connectors for a robust connection, industrial EMC immunity and a wide ambient temperature range of -20°C to 50°C. Unlike the Atlas SWIR camera, the Triton SWIR does not have a TEC cooling device and can therefore be lower power and more compact. "We're excited to expand our SWIR camera portfolio with the new Triton SWIR IP67 cameras, offering a compact form factor at a cost-efficient price," says Rod Barman, President at LUCID Vision Labs. "Compared to our high-end Atlas SWIR camera range, the Triton SWIR will enable easier access to SWIR technology for price sensitive customers, offering the same Sony SenSWIR IMX990 and IMX991 image sensor technology at a more affordable price." Triton is a GigE Vision and GenICam compliant camera capable of 1 Gbps data transfer rates and allows the use of standard CAT5e and CAT6 cables up to 100 meters. Triton features Power over Ethernet (PoE) that simplifies integration and reduces cost. All LUCID cameras conform to the GigE Vision 2.0 and GenICam3 standards and are supported by LUCID's own Arena software development kit. The Arena SDK provides customers with easy access to the latest industry standards and software technology. The SDK supports Windows, Linux 64bit and Linux ARM operating systems, and C, C++, C# and Python programming languages. The new Triton SWIR TRI013S-WC and TRI003S-WC models are now available for order. For more information, please visit our Triton SWIR product page or contact Sales. About Us LUCID Vision Labs, Inc. designs and manufactures innovative machine vision cameras and components that utilize the latest technologies to deliver exceptional value to customers. Our compact, high-performance GigE Vision cameras are suited for a wide range of industries and applications such as factory automation, medical, life sciences and logistics. We innovate dynamically to create products that meet the demands of machine vision for Industry 4.0. Our expertise combines deep industry experience with a passion for product quality, technology innovation and customer service excellence. LUCID Vision Labs, Inc. was founded in January 2017 and is located in Richmond, BC, Canada with local offices in Germany, Japan, China and Taiwan. For more information, please visit www.thinklucid.com.
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The camera's capability of imaging on the short-wavelength infrared light spectrum opens a world of industrial applications with greater precision in fruit inspection and sorting, packaging, IR microscopy, semiconductor inspection, material sorting and more.
RE: Equivalent aperture. Well yes, if you put a lens designed for a MF or LF camera on a smaller camera you aren't using all the capacity of that lens because the image circle spills way beyond the edges of the sensor. You may well be getting degradation due to that excess light bouncing around inside the camera. So, why would you want to use a lens not designed for the format you are using and spend your time figuring out how to to make it perform like a lens that was designed for the format you are using?
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As a gen x sceptic, my first reaction is to ask myself why they are doing this and how it is funded. Not that I’m suggesting there is anything duplicitous in this instance, but, you know, profit driven companies. It does look interesting, and there’s probably more than I ever need to know as a hobbyist. Looking forward to geeking out on some technical explanations :) Thanks Mike.
LUCIDTriton
Master all things optics and imaging using the new Edmund Optics® Knowledge Center! This page allows you to easily and seamlessly explore our extensive technical library of application notes, videos, technical tools, and more. Resources can be sorted by 90 different topics to help you find exactly what you’re looking for.
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Sony IMX990 price
SWIRcamera
Is this the same corporation that was Edmund Scientific, which put out a great catalog of surplus and other optical, electronic and other equipment back in the 60's and 70's (i.e., when dinosaurs still walked the earth)? It was great and inspired many Walter Mitty style projects.
Equivalent aperture? Oh gawd, that crap still floats about the blogosphere? Well, maybe these tutorials can finally make it go away forever.
Cancel my earlier comment. It is the same company, explained in the "Company/Timeline" tab on the site. Great to see that they adapted and are still in business.
Edmund Scientific was part of the post-World War II "war surplus" phenomenon … Edmund was, however, the only widely known supplier of surplus optics.
Welcome to Edmund Scientific! Since 1942, Edmund Optics® has been inspiring the next generation of students to become interested in science and engineering through its thought-provoking catalog of optics, scientific experiments, and learning tools. https://www.edmundscientific.com/
That's pretty impressive. For me, though, it's pretty wonderful just to know that Edmund Optics and Edmund Scientific are still around. Pretty sure I was at the surplus store in New Jersey at least once, but I remember almost nothing about it because my teenage science nerd mind was so blown.
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In 1942, amateur photographer Norman W. Edmund (1916 - 2012) found it hard to find lenses he needed for his hobby. This led him to advertise lenses for sale in photography magazines. It was so successful he founded "'Edmund Salvage Corporation'". It soon changed its name to Edmund Scientific and made its name with ads in publications like Scientific American as a supplier of chipped lenses, war-surplus optics, and low cost scientific gadgetry. Its advertisements caught the attention of hobbyists, amateur astronomers, high school students, and cash-strapped researchers.
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It is though. A thing I mean. You just have to prioritise depth of field in your photographic endeavours, and suddenly it's all about equivalent apertures. I shoot three formats, usually at least two simultaneously - 6x8,6x6 and 135 - juggling equivalent aperture values became my second nature.
Holy Cow! Turns out the EO Knowledge Center is loaded with tutorials about all sorts of topics relating to optics. It's still in beta, so they're looking for feedback. Well, my initial feedback is that I think I'm going to have fun at that library. (Oh, and can they pretty please do one on why "equivalent aperture" is not even a real thing? Thenk-yew.)
deals nicely with f-number equivalence. See page 10 in particular. But at 45 pages the article is likely TL;DR for many, so I guess we need a simple video.
The core of Edmund's offerings was surplus lenses. These were single-element lenses, shipped in 2.5-by-4.25-inch (64 mm × 108 mm) coin envelopes, with the approximate diameter and focal length stenciled on them. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Edmund_Scientific_Corporation